Sign In
marklon
This is a blog about security, coding and malware in no particular order. I write as a techie who handles security escalations from about 1/3 of the world. I spend a lot of time talking to customers with compromised networks.
Translate This Page
Translate this page
Powered by
Microsoft® Translator
Options
Email Blog Author
RSS for posts
Atom
RSS for comments
OK
Search
Advanced search options...
Search In:
Everything
Blogs
Forums
People
Groups
Places
Pages
Date range:
All Time
Last Year
Last 6 Months
Last 3 Months
Last Month
Last Week
Last Two Days
Tags
botnets
malware
review
Security
tools
updates
viruses
Archive
Archives
April 2008
(2)
March 2008
(5)
February 2008
(1)
January 2008
(2)
November 2007
(1)
October 2007
(3)
September 2007
(2)
August 2007
(3)
July 2007
(5)
June 2007
(5)
May 2007
(4)
March 2006
(2)
February 2006
(1)
January 2006
(3)
December 2005
(2)
November 2005
(3)
October 2005
(3)
September 2005
(7)
August 2005
(11)
July 2005
(1)
October, 2005
MSDN Blogs
>
marklon
>
October, 2005
Posts
Subscribe via RSS
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Views
|
Most Comments
Excerpt View
|
Full Post View
marklon
What is wrong with Whidbey?
Posted
over 7 years ago
by
MSDNArchive
3
Comments
The honest answer is “I don’t know”. I am fairly confident that the answer is “Not much” and smarter people than me are of the same opinion. We have good reason to think that it will be fine. A lot of our internal sites have been running in production...
marklon
Ways to make libraries that don't stink
Posted
over 7 years ago
by
MSDNArchive
4
Comments
Since the short list format seems popular, here are 20 things to consider when writing a component (assembly or COM or framework) for other people to use. Some are blindingly obvious. Others are perhaps less so. 1. If you don’t say that something...
marklon
Quick tips for fast applications
Posted
over 7 years ago
by
MSDNArchive
4
Comments
Just a short blog today We sometimes get requests to look at performance issues. These are 10 points to consider. 1. If you probably never need something, don’t always get it ready. A typical example of this would be not to load a rarely used...
Page 1 of 1 (3 items)